Understanding SEOMOZ and how to make improvements to my website
-
I want the same as everyone else the best position in Google.
My campaign is set up as sub-domain.
I am trying to get an understanding of what make the improvements to the following.
What are the most important metrics and if I can work to improve them what makes those improvements. Currently I have a good position in Google for my most productive phrase but feel I need to make improvements to ensure I keep that position. I am adding regular unique content and looking for relavant quality links but it does not seem to be making much difference to the metrics below.
Domain Authority 16 Domain MozRank 2.83 Domain MozTrust 0.86 External Followed Links 16 Total External Links 55 Total Links 668 Followed Linking Root Domains 8 Total Linking Root Domains 9 Linking C-Blocks 3
Subdomain MozRank 2.95 Subdomain MozTrust 1.73 External Followed Links 15 Total External Links 54 Total Links 667 Followed Linking Root Domains 8 Total Linking Root Domains 9
Which are the important metrics and can I improve my site to increase my Moz position therfore improving Google results
-
Yes, you are correct. EGOL and I are "poking fun" at one another.
-
Egol - Thank you for sharing your thoughts.
Rob - I thought the idea was to share good information.
-
EGOL
If you don't stop it they are all gonna start worshipping...YOU!
-
You can learn how these metrics are calculated using the links at the bottom of this post.
In short they are link metrics.
They are not a direct measure of content quality or user engagement.
I believe that a person should be working to improve his website to increase:
-- the amount of time that visitors spend
-- the CTR of your listing in the SERPs
-- the number of people who share your content
-- the number of people who ask for your site by name by typing your domain into a search box or typing it into a chrome address bar
-- the number of times people mention your domain - even if there is no link
The things above are based upon the quality of your content and google can detect them and measure them. I think that a lot more than links drive SERPs.
If I was google I would stop using links and use the measures above.
http://www.seomoz.org/learn-seo/mozrank
http://www.seomoz.org/learn-seo/moztrust
http://www.seomoz.org/learn-seo/domain-authority
Use the SEOmoz metrics to track your link profile over time and to get a gross comparison against other websites.
-
EGOL very much appreciated your last comment I believe that good engaging unqiue content is best and that the metrics are a gauge.
The link metrics will improve because of good content and some regular work looking for the right links.
Do I assume that Damain authority and Mozrank improve because of good content or age of domain.
I keep coming back to metrics because I want to understand what makes them tick.
However your recent answer is in my opinion the right way forward for any website. Assuming all of the onpage errors and notices are corrected.
-
The most important thing that you can do is to improve your website.
In your topic area or industry what is the most valuable content that you could produce that would be appreciated by your target audience? If you can identify that and produce best-on-the-web information that is helpful and useful and easy-to-understand then that is the best thing that you can do.
Best-On-The-Web
This type of content is liked, tweeted, linked to, emailed, bookmarked and shared. That type of activity will bring more people to your site who will like, tweet, email, link, bookmark and share. This activity can improve your rankings and also improve your metrics.
You can hasten that process by promoting your content so that a larger number of people see it - especially to the people in your topic area or industry who have a voice or who are active in reporting and sharing.
The SEOmoz metrics are a good way to get a numerical gauge of your progress over time. They can also be used as a way to compare the relative mojo of your site against others.
So, instead of looking to them to light the way to success, you should instead be making a big "to do list" of jobs that will improve your site, getting them done and helping other people discover what you have created.
One of the greatest problems that people have in doing this is that they produce yada yada yada content instead of best-on-the-web in their niche. So if your content is not making people say WOW! then it is time to kick up the quality.
Pedestrian content does not get shared. You need WOW! content for that to happen. Even if your site is about something as mundane as manure it is still possible to create content that will attract attention and be shared.
-
As explained in the opening discussion I am adding regular unquie content to improve the user experiance. Over time this will make the website an authority on the products we sell.
Note the word sell. I am fed up with paying Google for adwords traffic and currently this new website is enjoying a good position. Of course improving the position even by one place is atractive.
Your comment saying SEOMOZ metrics are not of any interest if this is so why are they here and why are you paying to be a member.
Help me out i don't understand why you knock the system you subscribe to.
SEOMOZ metrics do measure the position in search engines the websites that enjoy a better position than yours have a better set of metrics.
My question still stands does anyone have any idea how to improve the metrics even if generally it is through content I would just like some direction where to start.
-
I worship at the same alter..
heh... I saw you Yelping for sushi this morning.
-
Speaking of Heaven and Earth, you know you and I worship at the same alter. It is about user experience, content, etc. It's either what's my score, rank, etc. or it's name that uber huge parameter... EMD, Anchor text with keywords, etc. I find that it is easier to be fully holistic in the approach and not worry about that really, really, really important one item that will take me to the promised land! (wow, that promise land part came to me right at the end. I mean, dude, like, uhhh, you know).
PS - I really do think the thing Sergey was saying about the triple hypen link will bring true redemption to the web. (Couldn't help myself.)
-
Why do people worship SEOmoz metrics and are willing to move Heaven and Earth to improve them?
They don't determine your rankings and nobody is going to pay you for getting a good score.
There is more talk in Q&A about improving metrics than there is about improving websites.
Sometimes I think that these metrics are a decoy that keeps people from building a great website.
-
Phil (and Martino)
Welcome to the best place to learn and discover, the SEOmoz Community.
When I saw your question my first thought was SE Ranking factors 2013 or 2012 and went to find it to give a link and, there is 2011. So, I will quote Dr. Pete in speaking to one for 2013: Every time we do it, though, it gets a bit harder and more complicated. It is getting tougher by the minute to be sure what works, etc.
So, I will provide an opinion that does come from experience, but not one that is fool proof. First and foremost, build your site for your customer/visitor, etc. After insuring you have solid on page SEO throughout, stop for a moment and be clear that Google is not your customer. Understand that spending 8 hours a day trying to mine links might be better spent with writing exceptional content, acquiring exceptional images, and insuring a visitor to the site gets a quick answer to their query. One of the biggest flaws I see in SEO is tunnel vision: Becoming too focused on one or two parameters of the algorithm and losing sight of the reason you built the site. I have seen extensive discussions on how to get this or that link, to use or not use a hyphen, the value of exact match domains, on and on ad nauseum. At the end of the day, if you have good content and if you have an accessible site with reasonable UI/UX features, you can beat a lot of your competitors in the rankings. NOTE: If you do, please remember to answer the query in your meta description and then again on the page they will land on. (Yes, I have a bit of tunnel vision on this). One last thing on content is that if you really put good content up, they will come to the site. Please keep after it.
I tell clients nearly daily: Our job is not to make you rank first on Google, that is the job of the Indian SEO firm with the gmail email account... Just kidding: **Our job is not to make you rank first on Google; our job is to keep you ranked ahead of your competitors. **
I recently was in a very long discussion with a potential client we would really like to have. He has definitely drank the kool aid because he is obsessed with #1 ranking on the most competitive terms in his vertical. Yes, I understand from a business perspective why he is saying that and, frankly, as a business person I respect him a lot. The problem is that I must be very careful to provide enough other metrics that he can see what actually works.Stay on moz and keep asking and reading. Answer where you can and understand everybody that has answered more than 3 or 4 questions has gotten something wrong. Because of the type of people here, you won't see people being burned at the stake for a wrong answer.
Best to each of you,
Robert
-
I have thought the same here because I'm new here too.. but I think that we can find the answers in the "help" section..
loads of video explanation there http://www.seomoz.org/help
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Will I have duplicate content on my own website?
Hello Moz community, We are an agency providing services to various industries, and among them the hair salon industry. On our website, we have our different service pages in the main menu, as usual. These service pages are general information and apply to any industry.We also have a page on the website that is only intended for the hair salon industry. On this page, we would like to link new service pages: they will be the same services as our “general” services, but specialized for hair salons. My questions relate to duplicate content: Do we have to make the new individual service pages for hair salons with completely different text, even though it’s the same service, in order to avoid having duplicate content? Can we just change a few words from the “general service” page to specifically target hair salons, and somehow avoid Google seeing it as duplicate content? Reminder that these pages will be internal links inside of the hair salon industry page. Thank you in advance for your answers, Gaël
On-Page Optimization | | Gael_Regnault0 -
Should I remove a high traffic page on my website?
For the last few years, a particular blog post on my site has gotten 3 times as much traffic than any other page, even the home page; however, the topic of the post is only moderately related to the website topic and I'm wondering if all that unrelated traffic is negatively effecting SEO for our primary keywords. Here's an example.... Site topic: Yoga retreats in Costa Rica (we want to attract people who are interested in booking a yoga retreat) Blog Topic: How to extend your visa in Costa Rica (it's related only because it's about Costa Rica and travel, and may help our visitors stay longer) Other Notes: In 4 years, visitors to that blog post have never converted. Blog post bounce rate is 56%, significantly higher than almost any other page Lots of comments on the blog post so visitors to it are engaged and find it very useful To get an accurate reading of interested visitors to the site, i always have to filter entrance visits to this post in my analytics because these users are not an accurate representation of the visitors we're trying to draw. My question: Because I get so much traffic from the blog post, which is about the visa renewal process, will Google consider the website less about yoga and more about visas? If so, will it make it more difficult to rank well for yoga in Costa Rica? Does Google say to itself, "Hey, this website can't be an authority about both yoga and visas in Costa Rica so we're going to consider it a visa site because of all the visits and engagement it gets for that topic." So should I remove the post or just leave it alone? It offers a lot of people valuable information so I would never delete it entirely, but would redirect it somewhere else. Thanks!
On-Page Optimization | | Cabaretti0 -
Rich Snippets in wordpress websites
Hi all, What is the best and easiest plugin to configure and implement on WordPress blog websites? And what is the specific markup recommended for blog/article sites? Thanks!
On-Page Optimization | | emojo0 -
301 redirects. If new website is a different business does it still send link authority?
Hi Guys. I'm a music producer and studio owner. I want to start a new business for online music mixing. Instead of starting from scratch I want to use a 301 redirect from my previous site that has built up a little authority over the years. However, the old site is purely for my music studio, there is no mention of online mixing services. Will Google consider this 'odd'? Pass less link juice? Or perhaps pass no authority at all if Google 'decides' the 2 business are unrelated? Cheers in advance guys. Isaac.
On-Page Optimization | | isaac6630 -
Website was given to someone else, does a "move" or something need to be performed in Webmaster Tools?
A website was given to another person for their business. None of the original webpages remain they have all been removed. There is nothing on that domain now. Is there some notification that needs to be made in webmaster tools to make Google aware of this?
On-Page Optimization | | will21120 -
How can I make google display rich snippets when searching for my domain?
My domain is www.phraseexpander.com If I search for phraseexpander in google, I'm in the first position (as it should be) but google is not giving extra space to my result as it happens, for example, if you search for "fogbugz". Is there any way I can hep google index my contents (I currently have a site index that is created by Yoast SEO). Thanks a lot. Andrea
On-Page Optimization | | nagar0 -
Website accessible on http and https. Is it bad?
We noticed that our website is accessible on: http://www.example.com and https://www.example.com Both the versions have page rank of 4. Though on https version we have added canonical tag indicating http:// version as preferred. Is this fine or we need to use 301 redirect and let the site be accessible only on http:// version??
On-Page Optimization | | CyrilWilson1 -
How to avoid content duplication of my websites
Hello, We are having 4 domains abc.com, abc.in, abc.co.uk, abc.com.au with same content and same inner pages (abc.com/page1, abc.in/page1 etc.) targeting on different geographical areas. How can we avoid duplicate content issue in the home page as well as in the inner pages. Abc.com is the major site. Thank you.
On-Page Optimization | | semvibe0